Quantcast
Channel: THE SIKH NUGGET
Viewing all 158 articles
Browse latest View live

Mullocks Sikh and Punjab artefacts sale May 2013

$
0
0

A wide selection   of Punjab and Sikh related artifacts are set to be auctioned on May 21st May by British Auction House Mullocks.

The highlight of the sale is an early watercolor of Baba Deep Singh Ji fighting Afghan forces, dating from the 1880s, it's expected to fetch 400 - 600 GBP. According to the Auction house the painting came from the collection of General Roberts who served in India during the late 19th century.



 Sikh painting of Baba Deep Singh c1880

Other Highlights includes a historic painting of Maharajah Ranjit Singh with his Sikhs - early photographic views of the Golden Temple in Amritsar, portraits of Maharajah Ranjit Singh and Duleep Singh, historical documents  and books.

There are several artefacts related to Maharaja Duleep Singh, the deposed King of the Sikhs. This includes photos and a dinner set belonging to him.


Maharajah Duleep Singh Portrait 1860 Miniature portrait 

BATTLE OF SARAGARHI letters
This most rare find comes from the collection of the late Byron Edgar Farwell (1921-1999) the esteemed American military historian and biographer. The handwritten letter is by a member of the Tirah Field Force J.A.Lindsay stationed at Fort Lockhart, Samana, in 1897, who arrived at the bloody scene of the Battle of Saragarhi and describes the deaths of the 21 Sikhs of the 4th Battalion. The letter written to a colleague a few weeks after this famous battle where 21 Sikhs fought against 10,000 Afghan tribesman, is marked 

‘Please Read only Yourself’ – will give you some idea of what is going on at the front' he states ‘Saragarhi is an awful sight which 21 Sikhs behaved so admirably...and the place is anything but sanitary as of course not much burying could be done.



Tanjore School Watercolour of an Akali with Lady. Another rare painting is that of a Aklai Nihang. A finely executed early 19th century Tanjore painting heightened in gold of a Sikh warrior holding a bow standing with a female companion c1805-10. The panting is of the highest quality from the South Indian School and exceptionally large in size. A similar painting from the same series is in the Victoria & Albert Museum.



Mullocks Auctioneer Richard West-Wood Brookes  said " This is without  a doubt one of the most important sales relating to the Punjab and the Sikh Empire in recent times"
Please visit http://www.mullocksauctions.co.uk/ to view the full catalog

The sale takes place in Ludlow Shropshire (United Kingdom)  on the 21st May

Takht Patna Sahib to be given the Gold treatment

$
0
0


Patna: The birthplace of Sri Guru Gobind Singh the Takht Sri Harmandirji at Patna Saheb will soon be as fascinating as the Golden Temple in Amritsar. The reason? This shrine will also be wrapped in gold.

A number of UK-based NRI Sikh devotees in collaboration with others here have decided to take steps to improve the infrastructure at the gurdwara well before the 350th Prakash Parv in 2017 when devotees from across the world are expected to converge here.

The walls of the gurdwara especially the place where the Guru Granth sahib is kept could soon be wrapped in gold.

Artists from Amritsar and Iran will be called in to do the interiors. Over 7kg of gold will be needed for the interiors, sources said and added several doors will also be enveloped in gold - all involving an expenditure of Rs. 500 to 600 crore.


Interior sanctum of Takht Patna Sahib

Work is on to construct 500 air conditioned and 5,000 general rooms for Sikh devotees after acquiring land near Kangan Ghat and Maini Sangat. Baba Mohinder Singh of the UK has made available funds for the construction of 100 airconditioned rooms in Guru Durbar while another UK-based devotee has donated money for the construction of 100 rooms in Bare Ki Gali. Mumbai's Iqbal Singh and Surjeet Singh have also given donations for the construction of 100 rooms for 'sevadars'.

State tourism minister Sunil Kumar Pinto and urban development minister Prem Kumar have assured the prabandhak committee members that the roads of Patna City area would be widened, water supply and sewerage and drainage system would be improved and street lights would be installed before the Prakash Parv.

Dailybhaskar.com | May 02, 2013


Book Review: Economy, Culture and Human Rights: Turbulence in Punjab, India and Beyond

$
0
0
Reviewed by Sarbjit Dhaliwal

Economy, Culture and Human Rights: Turbulence in Punjab, India and Beyond
by Pritam Singh, Three Essays Collective.Pages 250. Rs 350

 IT is indeed a complex task to write about the issue of human rights; a nation state’s motives and objectives behind its violations; state repression to eliminate dissent and suppress those who challenge the state craft; politics and political actors working behind the issue of human rights. Pritam Singh, who teaches economics and is director of the Postgraduate Programme in International Management and International Relations at the Oxford Brookes University Business School, Oxford (UK), has dwelt on the subject in this book.

The eight chapters throw light on the complex relationship between economic interests and human rights. The question of human rights in the book mainly revolves around what happened in Punjab in 1984 and later, but the author has remarkably dealt with the theoretical and practical aspects of human rights at a larger international scale, right from going into the historical background, perspective of human rights, his own personal experiences with regard to human rights violations and so on.

Nations such as America have used human rights as a diplomatic tool to settle political scores with the countries ideologically opposed to it such as communist China, the erstwhile USSR and certain countries in the Middle East where economic interests related to fuel energy have been dictating the diplomatic agenda. On the one hand, such nation states have been showing deep concern for human rights violations, while on the other hand these have been violently crushing human rights of the countries perceived to be a threat to their economic interests with full military might. The author never skews his sense of proportion in his narrative of various events and discusses the issue with an objective approach. "The violations of human rights in Punjab required a critical scrutiny of Punjab’s conflict ridden past, which I tried to capture in the two chapters dealing with the past and present of Punjab. The conflict between growing centralisation of power in post- colonial India and the growing regional aspirations for decentralised self rule in Punjab led to a collision in 1984 and the massive violation of human rights that followed," says Pritam Singh while drawing his conclusions.

He further adds: "Accompanying this political conflict was the emergence of religion as a powerful social, culture and political force in the process of unfolding of capitalist organization of economy and society in India and Punjab. On the one hand, religion emerged as a humanistic response to the commodifying and dehumanising tendencies of expanding capitalism but, on the other, it also acted as a catalyst for sectarian mobilization and conflict." Defenders of human rights face extreme challenges and slurs. They are attacked by the state and its agencies in various ways. In a society evolved on sectarian divisions, "the articulation of human rights becomes an extremely challenging and tangled enterprise," asserts Pritam Singh, who was subjected to torture by police for his ultra-Left leanings as a student of Panjab University in the 1970s. The author builds the case for framing a more informed policy by the state and is for a farsighted approach by the human rights community. Human rights considerations in domestic policy as well as in the foreign policy regime are in long-term interests of building a more conflict-free society, he argues. The book is worth spending money on.

Sewa- A new film on the the plight of Panjabi manuscripts

$
0
0

In Punjab, a film maker explores how there exists a unique tradition of ‘seva’ that preserves as well as destroys old scripture.

The concept of ‘sewa’ or selfless service for the community has a unique place in Sikhism. As a means to promote humility, which is one of the three fundamental principles of the faith, its purpose is to work voluntarily for the betterment of humanity. It took Daljit Ami, an independent film maker from Punjab to discover that as a result of varied interpretations of ‘sewa’ in the context of Sikhism,  not just the preservers but destroyers of precious heritage in Punjab draw upon  ‘sewa’ to justify their deeds.

His latest film titled what else but Seva, documents some unique efforts in both directions. The target is ancient religious and literary manuscripts endangered by neglect, disuse and the march of time. To preserve these mostly handwritten documents, old editions of the Guru Granth Sahib and many more scriptures is the stellar work being done by Chandigarh based Punjab Digital Library which has digitized some 7.5 million pages since 2003.

People like Devinder Pal Singh went from village to village to search for old ‘birs’ of the Guru Granth Sahib and other manuscripts which they could digitize. From 5,000 pages a month, they now do some 3,000 a day. Then, as the work grew people began approaching them with books, photographs and newspapers too and they began doing those too. “Anything related to the history, culture and literature of Punjab and our catchment area is both Pakistan and Indian Punjab, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh and north India in general from where we get old material that is digitized to preserve its content, if not the physical form”, he says.


A damaged Gurmukhi manuscript 

But Daljit’s keen camera has also documented the destructive aspect of several ‘Angitha Sahib’ gurudwaras in Punjab and elsewhere – secretive but well organized places - where old scriptures and manuscripts are systematically cremated in huge quantities. The logic behind these crematoriums is the Sikh philosophy handed down by the Tenth Guru Gobind Singh that their holy book, the Guru Granth Sahib is the embodiment of a guru and no one else has that privilege.

 So we have Harsharan Singh of an Angitha Sahib gurudwara near Paunta Sahib in UP angrily opposing all those “who preserve the scriptures through chemical processes and digitization.”

“When the Guru Granth Sahib is our guru, he has a life and will die too. Have you seen anyone holding on to the body of his or her father? When the ‘guru’ scripture grows old, its parts are torn and faded, it has to cremated and we are doing this holy task,” he says.

Daljit was not given permission to film the huge crematorium at the gurudwara , or the room where scriptures from all over India, Pakistan and sometimes from different parts of the world are given the ritual purification bath and wrapped in clean clothes preparatory to their cremation. He took the shots with a zoom lens from outside the boundary walls. But Harsharan Singh did tell him that “though this is a secret place, we have no paid help, all who work here are volunteers and we have no shortage of anything, be it, ghee, wood or perfume needed for the cremations.”  The cremated remains are then collected and immersed in the river Yamuna that flows nearby.

The Angitha Sahibs that are known to exist in Goindwal Sahib and Ludhiana in Punjab and this one in Paunta Sahib. And all of them have an extensive network of collection centres where old manuscripts some 80 to 100 years old come. They need not be just Sikh scriptures, for as Harsharan Singh informs, they get holy books of Hindus, the Gita, Ramayana, the Bible and a variety of other scriptures from Jainism, Buddhism, Islam too and all are cremated with the same reverence and sanctity. “God is one and he is embodied in the scriptures of all religions,” they believe.

 When Devinder Pal showed the sants of Goindwal Sahib the preserved scriptures on his laptop, they were angry and wanted him to show them where the original old works are so that they could cremate them. The logic may not appeal to many, but theirs is also a kind of ‘seva’. And their followers are many.

Seva throws light on other efforts at  preserving old books, sometime single handed ones like that of Gurdev Singh Sidhu an author who rummages in old shops of Malwa in Punjab for torn, termite eaten works of Punjabi narrative poetry – a dying tradition.

This is Daljit’s tenth film and will be screened at the Punjabi International Film Festival later this month.

CHANDER SUTA DOGRA, Thehindu.com,

May 27, 2013

Rare fresco around Golden Temple on verge of vanishing

$
0
0



Amritsar, Punjab: Call it the ignorant attitude of the caretakers or the authorities concerned, the rare fresco adorned on the ‘samadh’, located just opposite to the Golden Temple’s main entrance, is on the verge of vanishing.

“This is the rarest wall painting I have ever seen. It has a rare picture of Guru Nanak Dev along with his two disciples- Bala and Mardana, playing ‘Rabab’ besides his two sons- Sri Chand and Laxmi Chand,” said Rajneesh Khosla, a heritage lover and collector and preserver of centuries-old rare manuscripts.

The beautiful fresco suffered further damage allegedly due to the ongoing construction work of the entrance plaza. The ‘samadh’ is located just near the newly constructed temporary ‘Jora Ghar’ and opposite the Shani Temple. The ‘samadh’ belonged to Mahant Tehal Dass Akhara, one of the 12 akharas situated around the Darbar Sahib.

Khosla said the handmade fresco had been made with natural colours, but unfortunately the careless attitude of the authorities concerned had done extensive damage to it.

Head of the akhara Mahant Nihal Dass said the foundation of the akhara was laid by Baba Sri Chand, the elder son of Guru Nanak Dev. He claimed that similar frescos were present inside the dome of ‘samadh’. However, with the passage of time, they got destroyed.

“We are ready for conservation of this rarest fresco and willing to spend money on it. But we don’t know how to preserve it,” said Mahant Nihal Dass, while adding that he would welcome the suggestions from the experts.

The sole wall painting was likely to face extinction if no concrete steps were taken to preserve it by the administration or the authorities concerned, said Khosla, while seeking the intervention of the district administration in the matter.

Deputy Commissioner Rajat Agarwal said he would have to check with the Department of Tourism and Culture, which has already identified a number of such heritage structures for conservation. He said he would ask the department to see what could be done in this regard.

Further, if the akhara head wanted to conserve it, they could also directly contact the department of tourism in this connection, added Agarwal.

Sikh Heritage in Pakistan to be promoted

$
0
0

Handprint of Guru Nanak at Gurdwara Panja Sahib

Pak body wants to promote investment in Hasan Abdal 
Holy Sikh shrine Panja Sahib is located in this town
If the Pak-Indo Friendship Association has its way, Sikh pilgrims visiting Panja Sahib in Hasan Abdal in Pakistan would travel there in style in a bullet train, stay in five-star hotels and come back with purified water from the spring associated with Guru Nanak, the founder of Sikhism.

Pak-Indo Friendship Association president Arif Chaudhary wants this and much more. Panja Sahib was declared a holy city by the Pakistan Government last year.

Chaudhary met Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal here today and invited him to Pakistan.Talking to The Tribune, Chaudhary claimed that the Nawaz Sharif Government was keen to promote ties with Punjab and that the Friendship Association would work in league with both the governments to promote investment in Hasan Abdal.

“Panja Sahib, which was not easily accessible earlier, is now a 50- minute drive from Islamabad,” he said. The area had acquired further importance with Sikhs from various parts of Afghanistan settling there, he said.

The lawyer said the forum was keen on Punjabi investment at Hasan Abdal, both by individual investors and the SGPC. He said the projects identified included a modern train service to Hasan Abdal, luxurious accommodation for pilgrims and bottling of the spring water associated with Guru Nanak.

The Pakistan official said the forum would also try to sort out issues related to the welfare of Sikhs living at Panja Sahib.

A rock in Panja Sahib is believed to have Guru Nanak's hand impression.

Badal, while accepting Chaudhary's invitation, said he had always championed the cause for further ties with Pakistan through opening of the Hussainiwal and Fazilka borders.

The Chief Minister hoped with the formation of a new government in Pakistan, the bilateral ties would further improve and new business and cultural exchange avenues would be worked out.

SK Sandhu, Principal Secretary to the Chief Minister, said Chaudhary had promised to get something in writing from the Pakistan Government to carry the initiative forward.

“Let’s see. Something may come out of it,” remarked Sandhu.

Jangveer Singh, Tribune News Service, Chandigarh, June 14

Afghanistan Sikhs, already marginalized, are pushed to the brink

$
0
0

Decades of war, instability and intolerance in Afghanistan have fueled waves of Sikh emigration, reducing the community to just 372 families nationwide, says Awtar Singh Khalsa, right, association president of the Karte Parwan temple in Kabul. 

KABUL, Afghanistan — Outsiders may have trouble distinguishing between the turbans worn by Afghan Sikhs, with their tighter folds, varied colors and tucked-in edges, and those worn by Afghan Muslims, usually black or white with the end hanging down the wearer's back.

The subtle differences, however, and what they represent, have fueled widespread discrimination against Afghan Sikhs, members of the community say, prompting many to move away amid concern that the once-vibrant group could disappear.

"For anyone who understands the differences in turbans, we really stand out," said Daya Singh Anjaan, 49, an Afghan Sikh who fled the capital, Kabul, for India after seeing his Sikh neighbors slain. "I'm sure the remaining Afghan Sikhs will vanish soon. Survival's becoming impossible."

There are no exact records on when Sikhs, a 500-year-old monotheistic people from western India and modern-day Pakistan, arrived in Afghanistan, although most accounts place it around 200 years ago. Mostly traders, they prospered and numbered about 50,000 by the early 1990s, concentrated in Jalalabad, Kabul, Kandahar and Ghazni. But decades of war, instability and intolerance have fueled waves of emigration, reducing the community to just 372 families nationwide, said Awtar Singh Khalsa, association president of the Karte Parwan gurdwara, or temple. This is the last of eight gurdwaras that once operated in Kabul, he said.

During the Afghan civil war of the mid-1990s, most of Kabul's solidly constructed gurdwaras were appropriated by battling warlords who shelled one another, destroying seven of them along with a Sikh school that once taught 1,000 students. Under Taliban rule, Sikhs had to wear yellow patches, reminiscent of the Jews under Nazi rule, and fly yellow flags over their homes and shops. Among the goals laid out by the United States and its allies after toppling the Taliban government in 2001 was religious tolerance for minorities, who account for about 1% of Afghanistan's population.

In practice, Sikhs say, Afghan President Hamid Karzai's weak and embattled government rarely counters prejudice by the majority population, which emboldens attackers. Hooligans rob, insult and spit at them on the street, they say, order them to remove their turbans and try to steal their land. Particularly dispiriting, Afghan Sikhs say, are charges by the Muslim majority that they should "go home," even though they've lived in Afghanistan for generations and are protected, at least theoretically, by freedom-of-religion safeguards in the Afghan Constitution.

Another disturbing example of the indignities they face is the treatment of their dead, many said. Cremation, a tenet of the Sikh faith, has been quietly practiced in Kabul's eastern district of Qalacha for more than a century. In recent years, however, some Sikhs who have tried to carry out cremations have been beaten up, stoned and otherwise blocked from doing so, at times decried as statue-worshiping infidels whose ceremonies "smell." Islam considers cremation a sacrilege.

Many Sikhs said they've complained repeatedly to the government to little avail. "In the last decade, the Kabul government has specified 10 different places for Sikh burials and cremations, but villagers keep giving Sikhs problems," said Anarkali Honaryar, a senator representing the community. "Even when President Karzai issued a decree, nothing changed." While in New Delhi last month, Karzai said that Sikhs are a valued part of Afghanistan and that he was sorry so many had left. "We'll do our best to bring the Sikh community and Hindus back to Afghanistan," he said.

Sikhs, Jews and other minorities enjoyed tolerance and relative prosperity until the late 1970s when decades of war, oppression and infighting set in. Although many Muslim families have also suffered hugely, Sikhs say they've faced worse pressures as a minority subject to forced religious conversions and frequent kidnapping, given their limited political protection and reputation for being prosperous.

Pritpal Singh, an Afghan-born Sikh living in England who has documented the plight of Afghan Sikhs, said his brother was kidnapped shortly before the family left in 1992. "I really looked up to him; it was such a shock," he said. "They asked for crazy money and we couldn't pay, so they killed him." As conditions worsened, Sikhs turned increasingly inward, building a high wall around the last gurdwara to prevent passersby from stoning the building, and cremating their dead inside, normally unthinkable, to stem angry mobs. Khalsa said he's met repeatedly with Karzai but nothing changes, and meetings with bureaucrats and politicians often end with demands for money.

"Corruption is unbelievable," Khalsa said. "The Taliban were far better than this government."

For those emigrating, India and Pakistan visas are much easier to secure than those to Europe, so some stop there first, then travel illegally to the West. Although securing a short-term visitor visa to India is relatively easy, obtaining citizenship is a "nightmare" given India's bureaucracy and general indifference, said Paramjit Singh Sarna, an Indian community leader in New Delhi assisting Afghan Sikhs. It does not help that Sikhism originated in India and that Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh is a Sikh.

Sarna said many Afghan Sikhs live in limbo in India. As "outsiders," they are unable to buy land or work, their travel is restricted, their children born stateless.
Dhyan Singh, a 62-year-old Afghan Sikh who has lived in New Delhi since 1989, said he misses Afghanistan despite the problems.

"Just last night, I dreamed I visited the Kabul gurdwara," Singh said. "It's only fear that keeps me away."

June 10, 2013|By Mark Magnier and Hashmat Baktash, Los Angeles Times

Efforts on to revive beris at Golden Temple

$
0
0

To rejuvenate the decades old sacred beris (trees) at the Golden Temple complex, the marble tiles near their roots would be removed to provide some breathing space to the trees.

There are three beri trees, Ber Baba Budha Sahib, Dukh Bhanjani Beri and Elaichi Ber. Realising the threat to these symbols of Sikh religious belief, experts of Punjab Agricultural University (PAU) and Khalsa College have been looking after these trees.Acting upon their advice, the SGPC has decided to remove concrete material that had been obstructing the natural stretch of their roots.

SGPC president Avtar Singh Makkar said they had initiated the process of reviving the beris as advised by the experts. The experts have also recommended enhancing sand mounds around the beris to provide them with nutritional components.

"It has been observed that the some portion of Dukh Bhanjani Beri has gone beneath the concrete structure around it. The committee has given its nod to remove the tiles," he said.

Showing concern over the health of the beris, the experts have conveyed to the SGPC to discourage devotees from touching beris with greasy hands as it would not only attract insects but would also clog the access of tree sap.

Experts suggest

Remove marble tiles around the beris to provide them some breathing space
Enhance sand mounds around the trees to provide them with nutritional components
Discourage devotees from touching beris with greasy hands as it would not only attract insects but would also clog the access of tree sap.

GS Paul/TNS, Amritsar, June 20

Saroops of Guru Granth Sahib safe at Gobind Ghat.

$
0
0


Patiala: The main building of Gurdwara Sahib of Gobind Ghat in Uttarakhand is safe and none of the 'Birs' (religious scriptures) of Guru Granth Sahib were lost due to rains as was feared, Chairman of Uttarakhand Minorities Commission Narinder Jeet Singh Bindra said on Tuesday.

Bindra, who is also the Vice Chairman of Sri Hemkunt Sahib Management Trust (SHSMT), claimed over phone that there was no loss of life reported so far, even though many vehicles have been washed away.

Refuting media reports Bindra claimed, "There is no loss of 'Birs' of Guru Granth Sahib, we have shifted Birs to higher places."

He also refuted the reports about Darbar Hall of Gurdwara Gobind Ghat being washed away.

He said, "Few rooms of Gurdwara complex were washed away and main building where prayers of 'Birs' of Guru Granth Sahib is done, is safe as it is on higher place."

"We are in touch with the staff of SHSMT through satellite phones and getting updates from the ground zero", he added.

He, however, appealed to all pilgrims and their family members, in Punjab and other parts of country, not to panic and stay calm as they have been working round the clock for the safety of the pilgrims.

He appreciated the working of SHSMT staff as they have forcibly evacuated the pilgrims to higher and safer places.

He said that the SHSMT has made arrangements for about 9000 pilgrims in Gobind ghat. "We have sufficient food and medicines for them even though many of our food and medicines have been washed away", he added.

The bridge connecting Gobind ghat and Joshimath was washed away and army has been working to built temporary bridge to evacuate the stranded pilgrims. He said that as many as about 2500 pilgrims have already evacuated on Monday and more would be evacuated today.

"It is virtually not possible to airlift all the pilgrims and with the help of army and ITBP we have been working on alternative arrangements," he said.

He said that Army has pressed 10 helicopters for the rescue operations and we have been coordinating with them.

"It is difficult to work in incessant rains", he said adding that we had been supplying food packets to army at the least to airdrop these packets where pilgrims have been stranded.

The weather was clear in the morning but it has become cloudy as day proceeded further, he said.

PTI
Zee News, Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Hemkunt shrine closed for the first time in 50 years.

$
0
0
Stock picture.

After the June 16 cloudburst, the Hemkunt Sahib shrine at a height of 15,200 feet in Chamoli district of Uttrakhand has been shut for the current season. The Hemkunt trust managing gurdwara at Hemkunt took the decision on Friday.

A trust member told HT over the phone that the scale of damage on the way to the shrine is so severe that it may not be possible for the shrine to open even in the next season. It is for the first time in 50 years that the shine was shut in between the season since 1960s when the pilgrims started visiting the shrine every year.

The shrine is opened for pilgrims every year for four months from June 1 to October 5. The Hemkunt shrine has not suffered any damage but Gurdwara Gobind Ghat on way to Hemkunt Sahib has suffered severe damage and needs re-construction.

"Birs of Guru Granth Sahib would be brought down and a few sewadars and other staff members would also come back soon," treasurer of Hemkunt Sahib trust Madan Mohan Singh Chawla told HT, adding that there were no pilgrims in the Hemkunt Sahib Gurdwara.

Gobind Ghat gurdwara, 23-km downstream, has been devastated after the Alaknanda river caused damage to the gurdwara. Serais, parking lots, main bridge and roads leading to Gobind Ghat gurdwara were damaged. The local authorities were yet to start the work to reconstruct and repair the damages. "At present, the priority is to evacuate stranded pilgrims, then to recover bodies and then clear debris and start re-construction," said the trust member.

Chawla said that after the recent cloudburst, the Alaknanda was flowing through the gurdwara structure, and the three-storey storeroom where ration and grocery was stored to feed the pilgrims for the entire season is full of silt and debris. The stored ration is no more fit for human consumption. The serais have developed cracks and have to be rebuilt.

He said the exact assessment of the damage caused by the devastation was still to be made, but apart from loss of human life, loss to property is to the tune of hundreds of crores of rupees.

A parking lot which caved in on June 16 night, 72 cars and about 150 two-wheelers were swept away. "How many people were sleeping in those cars can't be known," said Chawla. He said that after the news of the cloudburst came, pilgrims sleeping in the serais adjacent to the river were evacuated. A helipad at Gobind Ghat was also damaged due to which no take-off or landing was possible.

There are around 2,800 pilgrims still stranded at Gobind Dham, 5 km downstream of the Hemkunt shrine. Eighteen kilometre downstream of Gobind Dham is Gobind Ghat. Pilgrims walk 23 km from Gobind Ghat via Gobind Dham to reach Hemkunt Sahib. A major portion of the pedestrian path has also caved in as the Alaknada flows along the trek.

Gurpreet Singh Nibber, Hindustan Times, June 22 2013

Young Sikhs in a Global World conference 2013

$
0
0
Young Sikhs in a Global World conference 2013
Negotiating Identity, Tradition and Authority
18-19 June 2013, Lund University

Centre for Theology and Religious Studies, Lund University, Allhelgona Kyrkogata 8,Lund,Sweden.

The conference was organized as a part of the Nordcorp project Sikh Identity Formation, in which Dr. Kristina Myrvold (Lund University), Prof. Knut A. Jacobsen (University of Bergen), Dr. Ravinder Kaur (University of Copenhagen), Prof. Hanna Snellman (University of Helsinki), and Dr. Laura Hirvi (University of Jyväskylä) participate. They have successfully coordinated previous conferences in 2010 and also released a book Sikhs Across Borders: Transnational Practices of European Sikhs in 2012.

The conference attracted scholars and researchers from many countries including USA, UK, France, Denmark Sweden,Russia, Italy, India and Canada. The sessions on Tuesday 18 June were split into the following; Identity Formations and Negotiations, Religious Symbols and Bodies, and Young Sikhs and Transnationalism. The sessions included papers looking at the Sikh Diaspora in various countries. A consideration of Sikhs in Italy and the UK as well as further a field like Argentina.


Scholars and researchers from around the world participated in the conference

The Sessions on Wednesday June 19 were headed under: Religious Institutions and Authorities, Family and Home and New Research in Sikh and Punjab Studies. Papers ranged from the study of interfaith marriages, Nihangs, the Dasam Granth as well as new research on the 'codes of conduct', and Kirtan.


The papers were presented with a peer review by two critical friends. The revised Papers will be selected for a forthcoming publication. All participants thanked the organisers of the event and Dr Kristina Mrvold was presented with books from Leicester Sikh researchers Bobby Singh Bansal (The Lions Firanghi's Europeans at the Court of Lahore) and Gurinder Singh Mann (Sri Dasam Granth: Questions and Answers).

Further details including list of papers and participants can be seen at the Sikhs in Europe website

Maharaja of Patiala's 1,400-piece dinner set sells for astonishing price

$
0
0
A dinner set commissioned by the former Maharaja of Patiala has been sold at auction for $3m (£1.9m).

The set was purchased by an anonymous collector, Christie's in London said.The set weighs nearly 500kg (1,100lb). Every single piece in the magnificent 1,400-piece silver-gilt set has elaborate decorations.

The dining set was commissioned by Maharaja Bhupinder Singh in 1922 for a visit to Patiala by the Prince of Wales, later King Edward VIII.

Each piece comes with "a scroll and foliage border above cast and chased panels of animals, separated by cast daggers, variously engraved or cast with coat-of-arms, crown and initials" and was sold as part of the auction house's "Exceptional Sale", Christie's said in a statement to the BBC. The gold-plated silver dinner service was ordered from London to honour the three-day royal visit which culminated in a magnificent banquet on 24 February 1922, the auction house said.



Patiala, which is in the Indian state of Punjab, was among the wealthiest princely states of British India.
The exquisite banqueting service gives an insight into the maharaja's colourful and lavish lifestyle.He was the first Indian to own an aircraft and was also an avid and early motorcar enthusiast who owned and travelled in a motorcade of up to 20 Rolls Royce cars.

The maharaja was also the captain of the Indian cricket team.Historians say he married many times and took in many lovers and sired dozens of children.

BBC NEWS,

A first: ‘Sehaj path’ from Gurbani’s Braille version at Golden Temple

$
0
0


 Akal Takht Jathedar Giani Gurbachan Singh (2nd from left) and SGPC president Avtar Singh (left) honour Bhai Gurmej Singh, who transliterated the Gurbani in Braille, in Amritsar.

The foundation day of the Akal Takht, supreme temporal body of the Sikhs, was observed with fervor here today. The significant part was that for the first time, the ‘sehaj path’ was performed from the Braille version of the Guru Granth Sahib by Bhai Gurmej Singh.

A visually impaired former ‘raagi’ of the Golden Temple, Gurmej Singh had transliterated the Gurbani into Braille. The special holy book is enshrined in Room No. 13 of the Golden Temple complex for the convenience of the visually impaired devotees.

The Gurbani’s Braille version has 2,153 pages in 18 volumes with a page size of 11x12 inches.

Having retired in 1998 after serving the Golden Temple for three decades, Gurmej Singh had prepared six Braille copies of the holy book. He presented the first of these to the visually impaired children studying at the Central Khalsa Orphanage in Amritsar, the same place where he spent his childhood. He gave the second copy to the Golden Temple.

Gurmej Singh said it was for the first time that the ‘sehaj path’ was performed from the Braille-transliterated Gurbani. “I presented other copies to an old-age home for the blind near Phagwara, a home for the blind at Ludhiana and the Gurdwara Rakab Ganj in Delhi. I kept the sixth copy for myself. It is placed at my house,” he said.

Gurmej Singh and his family members were presented with a ‘siropa’ by Akal Takht jathedar Giani Gurbachan Singh and SGPC president Avtar Singh.

GS Paul, Tribune News Service, Amritsar, July 2

'Flying Sikh': Indian sprinter Milkha Singh biopic set for release

$
0
0

Bhaag Milkha Bhaag (Run, Milkha, Run), a biopic of the legendary Indian athlete Milkha Singh, is set for worldwide release on 12 July. The BBC's Geeta Pandey met the film's director, Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra, and lead actor, Farhan Akhtar, in Delhi.

The film, depicting the life and achievements of the "Flying Sikh", who overcame personal tragedy to represent India three times at the Olympics, is perhaps the most-awaited Bollywood film of the year.

As a young boy who lived in a remote village in Multan province, Milkha saw his parents and seven siblings murdered during the Partition of India and the creation of Pakistan in 1947.As his father fell, his last words were "Bhaag Milkha Bhaag", exhorting his son to run for his life. The boy ran - first to save his life, and then to win medals.

Arriving in India as an orphan in 1947, he took to petty crime and did odd jobs for survival until he found a place in the army. It was there that he discovered his athletic abilities. Singh's exploits on the track and field are legendary in India - he won five golds in international athletic championships, broke a 400m record at the 1960 Rome Olympics and was awarded the Helms World Trophy in 1959 for winning 77 of his 80 international races.

'Larger than life'
Mehra, best known for his 2006 hit Rang De Basanti and Delhi-6 three years later, was chosen by Singh's golfer son, Jeev Milkha Singh, to make the biopic. The athlete sold him the rights to his story for one token rupee.The director, who grew up with the "folklore" of the "larger-than-life" sprinter, says his film is not about Singh the athlete, but rather "the spirit of Milkha, the colours of his life".



Farhan Akhtar and Sonam Kapoor talk about Bhaag Milha Bhaag
"It's an amazing story - he was a local hero, the son of the soil, who went out and conquered the world for us."

Bhaag Milkha Bhaag, which took four years to make and cost $6.5m (£4.36m), begins in 1947 and ends in 1960. Actor Farhan Akhtar, who plays Singh on screen, says when Mehra narrated the script to him, he "felt tremendously moved by the story".

"I was also surprised how ignorant I was about his life. We knew about him as a sporting icon, we knew he was called the Flying Sikh, but didn't know what made him the hero."

Akhtar says he trained between four and five hours a day for the role and had several meetings with Singh to learn about his running style."An athlete's body language is very different from an ordinary person's. And Milkha had a unique running style. Most athletes run with their arms bent at the elbows, but he ran with his arms flailing about," says Akhtar.

Singh told the BBC he used to run six hours every day. "I would not stop till I had filled up a bucket with my sweat. I would push myself so much that in the end I would collapse and I would have to be admitted to hospital, I would pray to God to save me, promise that I would be more careful in future. And then I would do it all over again."

'Duplicate Milkha Singh'
In the official trailer for the film, as actor Farhan Akhtar races towards the finishing line in his white jersey, one is struck by the striking resemblance he bears to Singh: the sunken cheeks, the aquiline nose, the high cheekbones and identical body language.

Bollywood actress Sonam Kapoor plays Milkha Singh's love interest in the film. And the athlete has given his screen version a big thumbs up. "Akhtar is brilliant in the role. He has done a great job. He looks like a duplicate Milkha Singh," he told the BBC. Singh won Gold at the 1958 Commonwealth Games in Cardiff and went on to finish fourth in the 400 metres at the Rome Olympics, missing out on a bronze medal by a whisker. Even though he never won an Olympic medal, his only wish today is that "someone else should win that medal for India".

And he is hoping the film "will inspire the next generation".

"We had nothing in our times. The athletes and sportsmen in those days didn't earn much money. We worked for the applause; people's appreciation inspired and motivated us; we ran for the country," he says.

"People of my age and era are aware of me, but today's generation doesn't know about me. I hope the film will inspire the next generation, how hard work can take one far in the world."

BBC 12 July 2013 

Legacy of the Khalsa-The Eternal Scriptures 2013

$
0
0
Legacy of the Khalsa-The Eternal Scriptures, San Jose Gurdwara, USA, 27th July 2013 


A seminar to clear up misconceptions about Sikh history.

Honorable Khalsa Jee
In the last few decades Sikhs around the world have dealt with extreme pain and sorrow. Our most respected Sachkhand Sri Harimandir Sahib and several other Gurdwaras around Punjab were attacked by the Indian Army in 1984. Sri Akal Takhat Sahib and several other Gurdwaras were destroyed during this assault. Priceless items of historical significance were lost forever when the Sikh Reference library was deliberately set on fire. Sikh treasure (Toshakhana) was looted and what remained, set on fire as well. This systematic destruction of Sikh history was followed by a very well planned genocide marked by the extra-judicial mass killings of thousands of innocent Sikhs in Punjab, wiping out an entire generation.

After attacking us and our institutions physically, the Indian agencies are now working very hard to raise doubts in our trust and respect for Gurbaani.

As a part of this deep conspiracy,

1) so called ‘scholars’ in western Universities have initiated a systematic attempt, under the garb of ‘research,’ to challenge the fact that the living embodiment of the ten Guru Sahiban, Sri Guru Granth Sahib jee is ‘Dhur kee Baani: the Revealed Word’.

2) deliberate attempts are being made to distance the innocent and sincere Sikhs by raising doubts about:
Khanday dee Pahul by challenging the authenticity of Banis read while preparing the Amrit, the age old Ardaas, other compositions of Guru Gobind Singh jee in Sri Dasam Granth and the works of Bhai Sahib Bhai Gurdas jee, all of which are an inseparable part of the Panth.

3) historical events including those related to Guru Sahiban are being purposely distorted to shake the faith of Sikhs in their rich traditions and practice of the faith.

It is time for us to raise awareness about these attempts to create divisions in the Panth.

TO GET TO THE BOTTOM OF THESE CONSPIRACIES AND REALIZE THE TRUTH,
THE ENTIRE DEVOUT SIKH SANGAT IS INVITED TO ATTEND A SPECIAL SEMINAR TITLED

LEGACY OF THE KHALSA: THE ETERNAL SCRIPTURES
ON JULY 27TH 2013 AT GURDWARA SAHIB SAN JOSE, CA USA

AND ON AUGUST 3RD 2013 AT GURDWARA DASMESH DARBAR, WOODBRIDGE TOWNSHIP, NJ USA

SIKH SCHOLARS PARTICIPATING IN THE SEMINAR INCLUDE:

GIANI SHER SINGH (GURD. MANJI SAHIB, AMBALA), DR. JODH SINGH (PUNJABI UNIVERSITY), DR. HARBHAJAN SINGH (PUNJABI UNIVERSITY),DR. SUKHMANDER SINGH, DR. AMARJIT SINGH BAL, GURINDER SINGH MANN (ENGLAND), GURCHARANJIT SINGH LAMBA, DR. GURTEJ SINGH

Visit: http://khalsavirsa.com/ for more information
Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/events/592203200823862/


Concise Encyclopaedia of Sikhism released

$
0
0
Concise Encyclopaedia of Sikhism
Ed. Harbans Singh. Abridged. Dharam Singh
Publication Bureau, Punjabi University, Patiala.
Pages 723. Rs 1,400.

Reviewed by Roopinder Singh

The Encyclopaedia of Sikhism was the late Professor Harbans Singh's magnum opus, a project he devoted two decades of his life to.

A suave gentleman, known for his polished and courtly manner, he earned his Masters in English Literature, from Khalsa College, Amritsar in 1943. He had a distinguished career. He taught English, was a principal of Government College, Muktsar. In 1960, he was appointed Member-Secretary of the Punjabi University Commission and two years later, became the first Registrar of Punjabi University.

He was Fellow at the Center for the Study of World Religions of the Harvard University, USA, in 1968-69, during which period he published Guru Nanak and Origins of the Sikh Faith. Later, he was appointed Professor and made Chairman of the Department of Religious Studies in Punjabi University Patiala.

He devoted all his time to writing on the Sikh religion and the encyclopaedia project. So much so that it was often said that he declined to be Vice-Chancellor of the university, since it would impinge on the time he was devoting to his primary task of completing the compilation and editing of the encyclopaedia.

His knowledge, wide-ranging contacts with academic scholars, and his dedication — all resulted in the publication of the four-volume encyclopaedia. Indeed, I remember meeting him on many occasions as he toiled over the entries, cross-checking facts, editing them, fine-tuning the language.

As years progressed, the encyclopaedia started taking shape and in it were to be found entries on Sikh history, theology, philosophy, literature, art and architecture, customs and ceremonies, sects, personalities, and the like. The list of scholars who have contributed to the volume is impressive, and includes a virtual who's who of academics from Punjab, and many foreign scholars who have worked on the region, its arts, heritage and religions.

Professor Harbans Singh had a small team of scholars who assisted him in this endeavour. It was this team that continued its work after he suffered a stroke. This left him with physical impairments, although he was mentally alert able to continue his work.

Among the dedicated members of the team was Professor Dharam Singh, who has now published an abridged version of the Encyclopaedia. He has kept all the entries in the original four-volume publication. Considering that the original volumes were terse to begin with, this was a tough job.

Punjabi University, Patiala, has done a commendable job in publishing the volume which is handy, as encyclopaedias go, and concise. The print run of 550 copies seems conservative. I am sure that there will soon be demand for many more copies as people reach out to the handy single-volume encyclopaedia.

Merely browsing thought it brings to light so many facets of Sikh history and culture, that one is tempted to read more.

There is no doubt that the original four-volume work will retain its seminal status, and will continue to be the reference work which is held in high esteem. The concise version, however, may well serve the purpose of providing handy ready reference work even as it whets their appetite for more, which the original copy will provide.

Tribune India: Sunday, July 14, 2013

Desecration of Sri Guru Granth Sahib in Pakistan

$
0
0

AMRITSAR: Pakistan Hindu Sewa Welfare Trust has demanded from Pakistan government to take stern action against persons responsible for desecration of Sikh's holy book Sri Guru Granth Sahib.Trust president Sanjash Dhanja told TOI over phone from Karachi on Saturday that a group of Hindu's had torn the Sikh's holy scripture in the town of Pako Aquil in mid June following which there was outburst among Sikhs to book the culprits.

He said till now no action has been taken by the government against the persons responsible for blasphemous act. He informed that few days back police had arrested a local person but no case had been registered against them so far. Dhanja said "We all condemn this act demand justice. Those who have insulted Sri Guru Granth Sahib should be arrested and publicly punished so that no one could dare to insult other's religion and hurt a particular community's religious sentiment".

Reacting to the news of desecration of Sri Guru Granth Sahib chief of Sikh's prominent seminary Damdami Taksal Baba Harnam Singh said "It is most unfortunate act that has hurt the religious sentiments of Sikhs". He appealed to Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee approach Center government so as to take up the issue with Pakistan government and prevent such incidents in future.

Yudhvir Rana, TNN | Jul 13, 2013, 

New counters may end long queues for ‘parshad’ at Golden Temple

$
0
0

Devotees visiting the Golden Temple will no longer have to stand in long queues for getting ‘parshad’ as the SGPC plans to open 23 new counters, including 15 for 'karah parshad' and eight for 'pinni parshad', at the Golden Temple Complex very soon.

At present, there are only three counters for the 'karah parshad' and two for the 'pinni parshad', which witness long queues of devotees, particularly during the peak tourist season.

Darbar Sahib manager Jawahar Singh said they intended to open 15 counters of ‘karah parshad’ and four of ‘pinni parshad’ to facilitate the devotees.Apart from this, they would be opening four more counters of ‘pinni parshad’ near Ber Baba Budha Sahib, which would help the devotees take it along while making an exit from the holy shrine.

He said the ‘kar sewa’ was already underway on full swing and the work would be completed within a month. On an average, the ‘karah parshad’ counters record a sale of Rs 3 lakh daily while the ‘pinni parshad’ counters register a sale of Rs 1 lakh daily.

He said the sale of ‘pinni parshad’ was increasing day by day.The ‘pinni parshad’ is fast gaining popularity among the pilgrims after being launched on October 8 last year on the occasion of Guru Ram Das birth anniversary.

The facility (‘pinni parshad’) was started as the pilgrims from far-off places used to complain that they could not take ‘parshad’ from the holy shrine for their near and dear ones.Meanwhile, the SGPC’s move to renovate the ‘parshad’ counter area seems to have added to the pollution which is visible on roof and walls of the verandah alongside the ‘parikarma’, as the hearths on which the ‘parshad’ is prepared have been shifted a little from their original position.

The roofs and walls in the verandah have started turning black which is a clear indicator of the effect of shifting hearths.On the other hand, the manager said they would ensure proper restoration of the area damaged due to shifting of hearths near the ‘parshad’ counter area.

Easy access
  15 counters for 'karah parshad' and 8 for 'pinni parshad' on the cards
  The 'karah parshad' and 'pinni parshad' counters record a daily sale of Rs 3 lakh and Rs 1 lakh, respectively

Perneet Singh, Tribune News Service, Amritsar, July 20

Restoration work on Historical Shastars at Sri Akal Takht Sahib nearly completed

$
0
0
AMRITSAR SAHIB (July 30, 2013)—Various historical shastars that have been kept at Sri Akal Takhat Sahib are undergoing restoration work.  Many of these shastars were damaged during the 1984 Sikh Genocide (Operation Bluestar).  The purpose of the renovation work is to give them an ancient look.
Many of these shastars belong to Guru Gobind Singh, Guru Hargobind Sahib, Baba Ajit Singh, Baba Jujhar Singh, Baba Budha Sahib, Baba Deep Singh and other Sikh generals.  These weapons have been facing continuous deterioration since the army attack on the shrine.
These historic shastars include Sri Sahibs, teghs, katars, guns, chakarrs, shields, khandas and other weapons that have been re-enameled with gold and diamond embedding. Some of these have Gurbani engravings on them which make them highly valuable. The sangat visiting Darbar Sahib can catch a glimpse of these weapons every day after Sodar Rehraas Sahib recitation.
Cleaning of the Historic Shastars
A specialized team of workers has been tasked with the process under the guidance of Sardar Jagbeer Singh, Babal Balwinder Singh and Baba Narinder Singh from Sri Hazoor Sahib. These members said that the restoration process is being carried out keeping in mind the original design of the armour.
S. Gursharanjeet Singh, associate professor at GNDU strongly feels that modern technology should be used to preserve the uniqueness and originality of the Sikh shastars.  He condemns the usage of gold and diamond in the restoration process saying it would result in the loss of the original design.
Bibi Kiranjot Kaur (SAD) said that it would be a huge setback for Sikh culture if the original designs were disturbed in the so-called restoration process.


But, appointed Jathedar Giani Gurbachan Singh in his statement refuses any such allegations saying that only the irreplaceable parts have been restored and no changes are being made in the original design.

Sikh treaty for sale at Mullocks Auction house

$
0
0

A copy of the Amritsar treaty of 1809 takes centre stage at British Auction house Mullocks later this month.

The Treaty of Amritsar, (April 25, 1809), was a pact concluded between Charles T. Metcalfe, representing the British East India Company, and Ranjit Singh, head of the Sikh kingdom of Punjab.The treaty settled Indo-Sikh relations for a generation.

The immediate occasion was the French threat to northwestern India, following Napoleon’s Treaty of Tilsit with Russia (1807) and Ranjit’s attempt to bring the Cis-Sutlej states under his control. The British wanted a defensive treaty against the French and control of Punjab to the Sutlej River.

Although this was not a defensive treaty, it did fix the frontier of lands controlled by Ranjit broadly along the line of the Sutlej River.

Painting of a Sikh Guru c1840. A watercolour of a Sikh Guru painted during the reign of Maharajah Ranjit Singh

The treaty (a copy dated 1818)was presented to parliament is expected to fetch between 600 - 800 GBP Other highlights include a large collection of rare and early Sikh books in English and Punjabi, mostly out of print and some dating to the early 19th century, an early painting of a Sikh Guru and other historical documents and photographs relating to the Punjab. There also also some folios of Sikh manuscripts for sale as well.

Richard Westwood-Brookes said, "We are honored to be selling this document, the Amritsar treaty was very important in the foundation of the great empire Maharajah Ranjit Singh had built, we also excited about the large number of rare Sikh books we have for sale"

The sale takes place on the 21st August at Mullock's Auctions in Shropshire UK
Visit: www.mullocksauctions.co.uk

Viewing all 158 articles
Browse latest View live